Network Working Group | S. Thomas |
Internet-Draft | R. Reginelli |
Intended status: Standards Track | A. Hope-Bailie |
Expires: April 27, 2017 | Ripple |
October 24, 2016 |
Crypto-Conditions
draft-thomas-crypto-conditions-01
Crypto-conditions provide a mechanism to describe a signed message such that multiple actors in a distributed system can all verify the same signed message and agree on whether it matches the description. This provides a useful primitive for event-based systems that are distributed on the Internet since we can describe events in a standard deterministic manner (represented by signed messages) and therefore define generic authenticated event handlers.
This specification is a part of the Interledger Protocol work. Feedback related to this specification should be sent to public-interledger@w3.org.
This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.
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Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
This Internet-Draft will expire on April 27, 2017.
Copyright (c) 2016 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved.
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This specification describes a message format for crypto-conditions and fulfillments, with binary and string-based encodings for each.
Crypto-conditions are distributable event descriptions. This means crypto-conditions say how to recognize a message without saying exactly what the message is. You can transmit a crypto-condition freely, but you cannot forge the message it describes. For convenience, we hash the description so that the crypto-condition can be a fixed size.
Fulfillments are cryptographically verifiable messages that prove an event occurred. If you transmit a fulfillment, then everyone who has the condition can agree that the condition has been met.
In the Interledger protocol, crypto-conditions and fulfillments provide irrepudiable proof that a transfer occurred in one ledger, as messages that can be easily shared with other ledgers. This allows ledgers to escrow funds or hold a transfer conditionally, then execute the transfer automatically when the ledger sees the fulfillment of the stated condition.
Crypto-conditions may also be useful in other contexts where a system needs to make a decision based on predefined criteria, such as smart contracts.
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].
Within this specification, the term "condition" refers to the hash of a description of a signed message. The hash function must be preimage-resistant.
The term "fulfillment" refers to a description of a signed message and a signed message that matches the description. We hash the description and compare that to the condition, and also compare the signed message to the description. If the message matches the description and the hash of the description matches the condition, we say that the fulfillment fulfills the condition.
In the simplest case, the fulfillment can be a preimage that hashes to the condition, in which case the preimage is both the description and the message.
Crypto-conditions are a standard format for expressing conditions and fulfillments. The format supports multiple algorithms, including different hash functions and cryptographic signing schemes. Crypto-conditions can be nested in multiple levels, with each level possibly having multiple signatures.
This format has been designed so that it can be expanded. For example, you can add new cryptographic signature schemes or hash functions. This is important because advances in cryptography frequently render old algorithms insecure or invent newer, more effective algorithms.
The Section 2.3 of a crypto-condition indicates which algorithms it uses, so a compliant implementation can know whether it supports the functionality required to interpret the crypto-condition.
The crypto-condition format contains a Section 2.3 that specifies which hash function and signing scheme to use. Any message format for a condition or a fulfillment contains such a bitmask.
Implementations MAY state their supported algorithms by providing a bitmask in the same format. To verify that a given implementation can verify a fulfillment for a given condition, you compare the bitmasks. If all bits set in the condition's bitmask are also set in the implementation's bitmask, then the implementation can verify the condition's fulfillment.
Crypto-conditions can abstract away many of the details of multi-sign. When a party provides a condition, other parties can treat it opaquely and do not need to know about its internal structure. That allows parties to define arbitrary multi-signature setups without breaking compatibility.
Protocol designers can use crypto-conditions as a drop-in replacement for public key signature algorithms and add multi-signature support to their protocols without adding any additional complexity.
Crypto-conditions elegantly support weighted multi-signatures and multi-level signatures. A threshold condition has a number of weighted subconditions, and a target threshold. Each subcondition can be a signature or another threshold condition. This provides flexibility in forming complex conditions.
For example, consider a threshold condition that consists of two subconditions, one each from Agnes and Bruce. Agnes's condition can be a signature condition while Bruce's condition is a threshold condition, requiring both Claude and Dan to sign for him.
Weighted signatures allow more complex relationships than simple M-of-N signing. For example, a weighted condition can support an arrangement of subconditions such as, "Either Ron, Adi, and Leonard must approve; or Clifford must approve."
A description of crypto-conditions is provided in this document using Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1) as defined in [itu.X680.2015]. Implementations of this spec MUST support encoding and decoding using Octet Encoding Rules (OER) as defined in [itu.X696.2015].
Crypto-conditions use the following types within string encoding:
Any system that accepts crypto-conditions must be able to state its supported algorithms. It must be possible to verify that all algorithms used in a certain condition are indeed supported even if the fulfillment is not available yet. Therefore, all conditions and fulfillments contain a bitmask to express the required features. Implementations provide a bitmask of features they support.
Each bit represents a different suite of features. Each type of crypto-condition depends on one or more feature suites. If an implementation supports all feature suites that a certain type depends on, the implementation MUST support that condition type. The list of known types and feature suites is the IANA-maintained Crypto-Condition Type Registry [crypto-conditions-type-registry] .
To save space, the bitmask is encoded as a variable-length integer.
Below are the string and binary encoding formats for a condition.
Conditions are ASCII encoded as:
"cc:" BASE16(type) ":" BASE16(featureBitmask) ":" BASE64URL(fingerprint) ":" BASE10(maxFulfillmentLength)
Conditions are binary encoded as:
Condition ::= SEQUENCE { type ConditionType, featureBitmask INTEGER (0..MAX), fingerprint OCTET STRING, maxFulfillmentLength INTEGER (0..MAX) } ConditionType ::= INTEGER { preimageSha256(0), rsaSha256(1), prefixSha256(2), thresholdSha256(3), ed25519(4) } (0..65535)
An example condition in string format:
cc:0:3:dB-8fb14MdO75Brp_Pvh4d7ganckilrRl13RS_UmrXA:66
The example has the following attributes:
Field | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
preface | cc | Constant. Indicates this is a condition. |
type | 0 | Type 0 is [PREIMAGE-SHA-256][]. |
featuresBitmask | 3 | Boolean-OR combination of feature suites SHA-256 (feature bit 0x01) and PREIMAGE (feature bit 0x02). |
fingerprint | dB-8fb14MdO75Brp_Pvh4d7ganckilrRl13RS_UmrXA | The hash of the fulfillment for this condition. |
maxFulfillmentLength | 66 | The fulfillment payload is 66 bytes long, before being BASE64URL-encoded. |
Below are the string and binary encoding formats for a fulfillment.
Fulfillments are ASCII encoded as:
"cf:" BASE16(type) ":" BASE64URL(payload)
Fulfillments are binary encoded as:
Fulfillment ::= SEQUENCE { type ConditionType, payload OCTET STRING }
The following is an example fulfillment in string format, for the example condition [example-condition]:
cf:0:VGhlIG9ubHkgYmFzaXMgZm9yIGdvb2QgU29jaWV0eSBpcyB1bmxpbWl0ZWQgY3JlZGl0LuKAlE9zY2FyIFdpbGRl
The example has the following attributes:
Field | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
preface | cf | Constant. Indicates this is a fulfillment. |
type | 0 | Type 0 is [PREIMAGE-SHA-256][]. |
payload | VGhlIG...pbGRl | The BASE64URL-encoded SHA-256 preimage of the condition, since this is a PREIMAGE-SHA-256 type fulfillment. In this case, it is an arbitrary string. |
This specification defines a starting set of feature suites necessary to support the [Condition Types][] also defined in this specification. Future versions of this spec MAY introduce new feature suites and condition types, which SHALL be registered in the IANA maintained Crypto-Condition Type Registry [crypto-conditions-type-registry].
Support for a condition type MUST depend on one or more feature suites. However, all new condition types MUST depend on at least one of the new feature suites. This ensures that all previously created implementations correctly recognize that they do not support the new type.
Feature suites are chosen such that they represent reasonable clusters of functionality. For instance, it is reasonable to require that an implementation which supports SHA-256 in one context MUST support it in all contexts, since it already needed to implement the algorithm.
An implementation which supports a certain set of feature suites MUST accept all condition types which depend only on that set or any subset of feature suites.
Suite Name | Feature Bit | Feature Bit (BASE16) | Summary |
---|---|---|---|
SHA-256 | 2^0 | 0x01 | The SHA-256 hashing algorithm. |
PREIMAGE | 2^1 | 0x02 | The functionality of comparing a hash to a preimage. |
PREFIX | 2^2 | 0x04 | The functionality of prefixing the fulfillment with a prefix before generating the condition. |
THRESHOLD | 2^3 | 0x08 | The functionality of composing a condition out of several weighted subconditions. |
RSA-PSS | 2^4 | 0x10 | The RSA-PSS signature algorithm. |
ED25519 | 2^5 | 0x20 | The ED25519 signature algorithm. |
The SHA-256 feature suite provides the SHA-256 hash function. SHA-256 is a cryptographic hash function published by the US National Institute of Standards and Technology that produces 256 bits of output. This feature suite is assigned the feature bit 2^0 = 0x01.
The PREIMAGE feature suite provides conditions that use a preimage as a one-time signature. This feature suite is assigned the feature bit 2^1 = 0x02.
The fingerprint of a preimage condition is the hash of an arbitrary value. The payload of a preimage fulfillment is the hashed arbitrary value before hashing, also known as the preimage. Conditions that use this preimage MUST also rely on a cryptographically secure hashing algorithm. Since cryptographically secure hashing functions are preimage-resistant, only the original creator of a preimage condition can produce the preimage, as long as it contains a large amount of random entropy.
The PREFIX feature suite provides conditions that prepend a fixed message to a subcondition. This feature suite is assigned the feature bit 2^2 = 0x04.
A prefix condition prepends the message to be validated with a constant string before passing it on to the subcondition's validation function.
The THRESHOLD feature suite provides conditions that have several weighted subconditions and a threshold number. This feature suite is assigned the feature bit 2^3 = 0x08.
Threshold conditions provide flexible multi-signing, such as requiring "M-of-N" subconditions be fulfilled. Subconditions can also be weighted so that one subcondition can count multiple times towards meeting the threshold.
The RSA-PSS feature suite provides the RSS-PSA signature algorithm. RSA-PSS is a signature algorithm based on the RSA cryptosystem, which relates to the problem of factoring the product of two large prime numbers. This feature suite is assigned the feature bit 2^4 = 0x10.
The ED25519 feature suite provides the Ed25519 signature algorithm. Ed25519 is a signature algorithm based on the EdDSA signing scheme and the compact elliptic curve known as Ed25519. This feature suite is assigned the feature bit 2^5 = 0x20.
The following condition types are defined in this version of the specification. Future versions of this spec MAY introduce new feature suites and condition types, which SHALL be registered in the IANA maintained Crypto-Condition Type Registry [crypto-conditions-type-registry].
PREIMAGE-SHA-256 is assigned the type ID 0. It relies on the SHA-256 and PREIMAGE feature suites which corresponds to a feature bitmask of 0x03.
This type of condition is also called a "hashlock". By creating a hash of a difficult-to-guess 256-bit random or pseudo-random integer it is possible to create a condition which the creator can trivially fulfill by publishing the random value. However, for anyone else, the condition is cryptographically hard to fulfill, because they would have to find a preimage for the given condition hash.
Implementations MUST ignore any input message when validating a PREIMAGE-SHA-256 fulfillment.
The fingerprint of a PREIMAGE-SHA-256 condition is the SHA-256 hash of the preimage.
The fulfillment payload of a PREIMAGE-SHA-256 condition is the preimage.
Example condition:
cc:0:3:dB-8fb14MdO75Brp_Pvh4d7ganckilrRl13RS_UmrXA:66
Example fulfillment:
cf:0:VGhlIG9ubHkgYmFzaXMgZm9yIGdvb2QgU29jaWV0eSBpcyB1bmxpbWl0ZWQgY3JlZGl0LuKAlE9zY2FyIFdpbGRl
PREFIX-SHA-256 is assigned the type ID 1. It relies on the SHA-256 and PREFIX feature suites which corresponds to a feature bitmask of 0x05.
Prefix conditions provide a way to effective narrow the scope of other conditions. A condition can be used as the fingerprint of a public key to sign an arbitrary message. By creating a prefix subcondition we can narrow the scope from signing an arbitrary message to signing a message with a specific prefix.
When a prefix fulfillment is validated against a message, it will prepend the prefix to the provided message and will use the result as the message to validate against the subfulfillment.
The fingerprint of a PREFIX-SHA-256 condition is the SHA-256 digest of the fingerprint contents given below:
PrefixSha256FingerprintContents ::= SEQUENCE { prefix OCTET STRING, condition Condition }
PrefixSha256FulfillmentPayload ::= SEQUENCE { prefix OCTET STRING, subfulfillment Fulfillment }
Example condition:
cc:1:25:7myveZs3EaZMMuez-3kq6u69BDNYMYRMi_VF9yIuFLc:102
Example fulfillment:
cf:1:DUhlbGxvIFdvcmxkISAABGDsFyuTrV5WO_STLHDhJFA0w1Rn7y79TWTr-BloNGfiv7YikfrZQy-PKYucSkiV2-KT9v_aGmja3wzN719HoMchKl_qPNqXo_TAPqny6Kwc7IalHUUhJ6vboJ0bbzMcBwo
THRESHOLD-SHA-256 is assigned the type ID 2. It relies on the SHA-256 and THRESHOLD feature suites which corresponds to a feature bitmask of 0x09.
The fingerprint of a THRESHOLD-SHA-256 condition is the SHA-256 digest of the fingerprint contents given below:
ThresholdSha256FingerprintContents ::= SEQUENCE { threshold INTEGER (0..4294967295), subconditions SEQUENCE OF ThresholdSubcondition } ThresholdSubcondition ::= SEQUENCE { weight INTEGER (0..4294967295), condition Condition }
The list of conditions is sorted first based on length, shortest first. Elements of the same length are sorted in lexicographic (big-endian) order, smallest first.
ThresholdSha256FulfillmentPayload ::= SEQUENCE { threshold INTEGER (0..4294967295), subfulfillments SEQUENCE OF ThresholdSubfulfillment } ThresholdSubfulfillment ::= SEQUENCE { weight INTEGER (0..4294967295) DEFAULT 1, condition Condition OPTIONAL, fulfillment Fulfillment OPTIONAL }
Example condition:
cc:2:2b:mJUaGKCuF5n-3tfXM2U81VYtHbX-N8MP6kz8R-ASwNQ:146
Example fulfillment:
cf:2:AQEBAgEBAwAAAAABAQAnAAQBICDsFyuTrV5WO_STLHDhJFA0w1Rn7y79TWTr-BloNGfivwFg
RSA-SHA-256 is assigned the type ID 3. It relies on the SHA-256 and RSA-PSS feature suites which corresponds to a feature bitmask of 0x11.
The signature algorithm used is RSASSA-PSS as defined in PKCS#1 v2.2. [RFC3447]
Implementations MUST NOT use the default RSASSA-PSS-params. Implementations MUST use the SHA-256 hash algorithm and therefor, the same algorithm in the mask generation algorithm, as recommended in [RFC3447]. Implementations MUST also use a salt length of 32 bytes (equal to the size of the output from the SHA-256 algorithm). Therefore the algorithm identifier will have the following value:
rSASSA-PSS-Crypto-Conditions-Identifier RSASSA-AlgorithmIdentifier ::= { algorithm id-RSASSA-PSS, parameters RSASSA-PSS-params : { hashAlgorithm sha256, maskGenAlgorithm mgf1SHA256, saltLength 32, trailerField trailerFieldBC } } sha256 HashAlgorithm ::= { algorithm id-sha256, parameters NULL } mgf1SHA256 MaskGenAlgorithm ::= { algorithm id-mgf1, parameters HashAlgorithm : sha256 }
The fingerprint of a RSA-SHA-256 condition is the SHA-256 digest of the fingerprint contents given below:
RsaSha256FingerprintContents ::= SEQUENCE { modulus OCTET STRING (SIZE(128..512)) }
RsaSha256FulfillmentPayload ::= SEQUENCE { modulus OCTET STRING (SIZE(128..512)), signature OCTET STRING (SIZE(128..512)) }
The message to be signed is provided separately. If no message is provided, the message is assumed to be an octet string of length zero.
The recommended modulus size as of 2016 is 2048 bits [KEYLENGTH-RECOMMENDATION] . In the future we anticipate an upgrade to 3072 bits which provides approximately 128 bits of security [NIST-KEYMANAGEMENT] (p. 64), about the same level as SHA-256.
Example condition:
cc:3:11:Bw-r77AGqSCL0huuMQYj3KW0Jh67Fpayeq9h_4UJctg:260
Example fulfillment:
cf:3:gYCzDnqTh4O6v4NoUP9J4U-H4_ktXEbjP-yj5PCyI1hYCxF2WZX0uO6n-0cSwuHjFvf3dalT0jIhahadmmTdwAcSCkALN_KvwHe2L-ME3nTeahGexAdrUpxPYJawuq1PUz3wFzubgi_YXWX6S--pLY9ST2nLygE2vYDQlcFprsDglYGAjQM0-Z5B-953uQtJ5dXL1D5TWpM0s0eFF0Zty7J2Y3Nb0PqsR5I47a2wYlA7-106vjC8gHFdHVeSR6JksSrhj8YaMWfV0A6qhPz6hq-TqSKCXd4mf3eCpyyFYR_EyH5zXd56sJEU3snWlFbB_bKAW4si_qdfY9dT87YGUp_Grm0
ED25519 is assigned the type ID 4. It relies only on the ED25519 feature suite which corresponds to a bitmask of 0x20.
The exact algorithm and encodings used for public key and signature are defined in [I-D.irtf-cfrg-eddsa] as Ed25519. SHA-512 is used as the hashing function.
Note: This document is not defining the SHA-512 versions of other condition types. In addition, the Ed25519 condition type is already uniquely identified by a corresponding Ed25519 feature suite. Therefore we intentionally do not introduce a SHA-512 feature suite in this document.
The fingerprint of a ED25519 condition is the 32 byte Ed25519 public key. Since the public key is already very small, we do not hash it.
Ed25519FulfillmentPayload ::= SEQUENCE { publicKey OCTET STRING (SIZE(32)), signature OCTET STRING (SIZE(64)) }
Example condition:
cc:4:20:7Bcrk61eVjv0kyxw4SRQNMNUZ-8u_U1k6_gZaDRn4r8:96
Example fulfillment:
cf:4:7Bcrk61eVjv0kyxw4SRQNMNUZ-8u_U1k6_gZaDRn4r-2IpH62UMvjymLnEpIldvik_b_2hpo2t8Mze9fR6DHISpf6jzal6P0wD6p8uisHOyGpR1FISer26CdG28zHAcK
[I-D.irtf-cfrg-eddsa] | Josefsson, S. and I. Liusvaara, "Edwards-curve Digital Signature Algorithm (EdDSA)", Internet-Draft draft-irtf-cfrg-eddsa-04, March 2016. |
[itu.X680.2015] | International Telecommunications Union, "Information technology – Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1): Specification of basic notation", August 2015. |
[itu.X696.2015] | International Telecommunications Union, "Information technology – ASN.1 encoding rules: Specification of Octet Encoding Rules (OER)", August 2015. |
[RFC3447] | Jonsson, J. and B. Kaliski, "Public-Key Cryptography Standards (PKCS) #1: RSA Cryptography Specifications Version 2.1", RFC 3447, DOI 10.17487/RFC3447, February 2003. |
[RFC4648] | Josefsson, S., "The Base16, Base32, and Base64 Data Encodings", RFC 4648, DOI 10.17487/RFC4648, October 2006. |
[KEYLENGTH-RECOMMENDATION] | BlueKrypt - Cryptographic Key Length Recommendation", September 2015. | , "
[LARGE-RSA-EXPONENTS] | Imperial Violet - Very large RSA public exponents (17 Mar 2012)", March 2012. | , "
[NIST-KEYMANAGEMENT] | NIST - Recommendation for Key Management - Part 1 - General (Revision 3)", July 2012. | , "
[OPENSSL-X509-CERT-EXAMPLES] | OpenSSL - X509 certificate examples for testing and verification", July 2012. | , "
[RFC2119] | Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997. |
[RFC3110] | Eastlake 3rd, D., "RSA/SHA-1 SIGs and RSA KEYs in the Domain Name System (DNS)", RFC 3110, DOI 10.17487/RFC3110, May 2001. |
[RFC4871] | Allman, E., Callas, J., Delany, M., Libbey, M., Fenton, J. and M. Thomas, DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM) Signatures", RFC 4871, DOI 10.17487/RFC4871, May 2007. |
[USING-RSA-EXPONENT-OF-65537] | Cryptography - StackExchange - Impacts of not using RSA exponent of 65537", November 2014. | , "
This section to be expanded in a later draft.
This section to be expanded in a later draft. For now, see the test cases for the reference implementation: https://github.com/interledger/five-bells-condition/tree/master/test
--<ASN1.PDU CryptoConditions.Condition, CryptoConditions.Fulfillment>-- CryptoConditions DEFINITIONS AUTOMATIC TAGS ::= BEGIN /** * CONTAINERS */ Condition ::= SEQUENCE { type ConditionType, featureBitmask OCTET STRING, fingerprint OCTET STRING, maxFulfillmentLength INTEGER (0..MAX) } Fulfillment ::= SEQUENCE { type ConditionType, payload OCTET STRING } ConditionType ::= INTEGER { preimageSha256(0), rsaSha256(1), prefixSha256(2), thresholdSha256(3), ed25519(4) } (0..65535) /** * FULFILLMENT PAYLOADS */ -- For preimage conditions, the payload equals the preimage PrefixSha256FulfillmentPayload ::= SEQUENCE { prefix OCTET STRING, subfulfillment Fulfillment } ThresholdSha256FulfillmentPayload ::= SEQUENCE { threshold INTEGER (0..4294967295), subfulfillments SEQUENCE OF ThresholdSubfulfillment } ThresholdSubfulfillment ::= SEQUENCE { weight INTEGER (0..4294967295) DEFAULT 1, condition Condition OPTIONAL, fulfillment Fulfillment OPTIONAL } RsaSha256FulfillmentPayload ::= SEQUENCE { modulus OCTET STRING (SIZE(128..512)), signature OCTET STRING (SIZE(128..512)) } Ed25519FulfillmentPayload ::= SEQUENCE { publicKey OCTET STRING (SIZE(32)), signature OCTET STRING (SIZE(64)) } /** * FINGERPRINTS */ -- SHA-256 hash of the fingerprint contents Sha256Fingerprint ::= OCTET STRING (SIZE(32)) -- digest -- 32-byte Ed25519 public key Ed25519Fingerprint ::= OCTET STRING (SIZE(32)) -- publicKey /** * FINGERPRINT CONTENTS * * The content that will be hashed to arrive at the fingerprint. */ -- The preimage type hashes the raw contents of the preimage PrefixSha256FingerprintContents ::= SEQUENCE { prefix OCTET STRING, condition Condition } ThresholdSha256FingerprintContents ::= SEQUENCE { threshold INTEGER (0..4294967295), subconditions SEQUENCE OF ThresholdSubcondition } ThresholdSubcondition ::= SEQUENCE { weight INTEGER (0..4294967295), condition Condition } RsaSha256FingerprintContents ::= INTEGER (0..MAX) -- modulus /** * EXAMPLES */ exampleCondition Condition ::= { type preimageSha256, featureBitmask '03'H, fingerprint ' E3B0C442 98FC1C14 9AFBF4C8 996FB924 27AE41E4 649B934C A495991B 7852B855 'H, maxFulfillmentLength 2 } exampleFulfillment Fulfillment ::= { type preimageSha256, payload '00'H } exampleRsaSha256FulfillmentPayload RsaSha256FulfillmentPayload ::= { modulus ' B30E7A93 8783BABF 836850FF 49E14F87 E3F92D5C 46E33FEC A3E4F0B2 2358580B 11765995 F4B8EEA7 FB4712C2 E1E316F7 F775A953 D232216A 169D9A64 DDC00712 0A400B37 F2AFC077 B62FE304 DE74DE6A 119EC407 6B529C4F 6096B0BA AD4F533D F0173B9B 822FD85D 65FA4BEF A92D8F52 4F69CBCA 0136BD80 D095C169 AEC0E095 'H, signature ' 48E8945E FE007556 D5BF4D5F 249E4808 F7307E29 511D3262 DAEF61D8 8098F9AA 4A8BC062 3A8C9757 38F65D6B F459D543 F289D73C BC7AF4EA 3A33FBF3 EC444044 7911D722 94091E56 1833628E 49A772ED 608DE6C4 4595A91E 3E17D6CF 5EC3B252 8D63D2AD D6463989 B12EEC57 7DF64709 60DF6832 A9D84C36 0D1C217A D64C8625 BDB594FB 0ADA086C DECBBDE5 80D424BF 9746D2F0 C312826D BBB00AD6 8B52C4CB 7D47156B A35E3A98 1C973863 792CC80D 04A18021 0A524158 65B64B3A 61774B1D 3975D78A 98B0821E E55CA0F8 6305D425 29E10EB0 15CEFD40 2FB59B2A BB8DEEE5 2A6F2447 D2284603 D219CD4E 8CF9CFFD D5498889 C3780B59 DD6A57EF 7D732620 'H } exampleEd25519FulfillmentPayload Ed25519FulfillmentPayload ::= { publicKey ' EC172B93 AD5E563B F4932C70 E1245034 C35467EF 2EFD4D64 EBF81968 3467E2BF 'H, signature ' B62291FA D9432F8F 298B9C4A 4895DBE2 93F6FFDA 1A68DADF 0CCDEF5F 47A0C721 2A5FEA3C DA97A3F4 C03EA9F2 E8AC1CEC 86A51D45 2127ABDB A09D1B6F 331C070A 'H } END
The following initial entries should be added to the Crypto-Condition Type registry to be created and maintained at (the suggested URI) http://www.iana.org/assignments/crypto-condition-types:
The following feature suite bits are registered:
Type Bit | Exp. | Hex | Feature |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 2^0 | 0x01 | SHA-256 |
10 | 2^1 | 0x02 | PREIMAGE |
100 | 2^2 | 0x04 | PREFIX |
1000 | 2^3 | 0x08 | THRESHOLD |
10000 | 2^4 | 0x10 | RSA |
100000 | 2^5 | 0x20 | ED25519 |
The following types are registered:
Type ID | Required Bitmask | Type Name |
---|---|---|
0 | 0x03 | PREIMAGE-SHA-256 |
1 | 0x05 | PREFIX-SHA-256 |
2 | 0x09 | THRESHOLD-SHA-256 |
3 | 0x11 | RSA-SHA-256 |
4 | 0x20 | ED25519 |